walter23
Member
My first day of lith printing was interesting. I discovered that I need to continually and vigorously agitate (by stirring and poking with my rubber-tipped bamboo tongs as randomly and completely as possible) to avoid uneven development. By uneven I don't mean streaks or swirls or blotches, I mean large dark zones and light zones (e.g. black edges and underdeveloped center) which seemed to correlate to how I was agitating.
This was with small (6x7.5") prints and with snatch time coming up after about 2 to 5 minutes. I'm not sure how I'd handle it with larger prints or longer development times.
Is there a better way? I didn't test to see if the issue was just that I needed to poke the print down (it may have been partially on the surface in the cases where it developed unevenly) or if the improvement really was because of the more vigorous agitation.
This was with small (6x7.5") prints and with snatch time coming up after about 2 to 5 minutes. I'm not sure how I'd handle it with larger prints or longer development times.
Is there a better way? I didn't test to see if the issue was just that I needed to poke the print down (it may have been partially on the surface in the cases where it developed unevenly) or if the improvement really was because of the more vigorous agitation.